Monday, October 16, 2017

AMERICANA


“AMERICANA”

            A few weeks ago Atlanta Interfaith Broadcasting (AIB) showed an interview that Angela Harrington Rice had done with me in the spring of this year.  It is part of a series that they are doing on long pastorates and our spiritual journeys.  The interview was about 90 minutes in the Oakhurst Presbyterian sanctuary, and they did a good edit to bring it down to about 28 minutes.  If you’d like to see it, here is the You Tube link:

            In another shameless advertisement, my book of sermons, edited by the great Collin Cornell, and entitled “Deeper Waters:  Sermons for a New Vision” has just been published by Wipf&Stock Books.  You can order it from them or from Amazon or from me. 

            This process brought back a lot of memories, and it fit in well with a journey that Caroline and I recently took to Baltimore and DC, in which we experienced a microcosm of American history.  We drove up to Baltimore through the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, so important in the Civil War.  We cut through part of West Virginia, passing by Harper’s Ferry, remembering John Brown.  We went up to celebrate Susan’s birthday, and we had a great time doing it.   We visited with our long-time friends Ed Loring and Murphy Davis and shared a basketball game in the back of the new Open Door Community Baltimore.  Susan took us to a play centered on black people and HIV/AIDS, and it was very powerful.  The play was interactive, and we all began in a crowded clinic, with a lot of waiting.  When the nurse asked for our insurance cards, I gave her a blank sheet of paper, and she said that it had nothing on it. I replied that it was a Trump Insurance Card!

            We also visited the Babe Ruth Museum in honor of my love of baseball – yes, it has been my lifelong dream to play professional baseball, but alas, I was done in at about 12 years old, when the pitchers began to throw curve balls!  I am a baseball fan because it is so much like life – the best hitters only succeed 30% of the time, and there is no clock to time the game and pronounce that it is over.  We also ate supper one night at a new restaurant named Ida B’s, after the great Ida B. Wells.  I was reminded of her powerful witness, a witness so relevant to today’s world.

            On our last day in Baltimore, Susan graciously arose at 6:30 AM to seek online tickets for that day for the National African-American Museum in DC, and she got some for us!  We had been there last year but were able to see only the bottom 4  floors.  We had only a couple of hours this time, so we went to the arts/sports/food floor, and it was once again so powerful!  The best part of DC, however, was staying with our friend Dr. Gayraud Wilmore.  Some of you may know Gay, and some of you may remember that he volunteered to be my adopted father – yay!  So, thanks to Caroline, we presented him with an “official” certificate of adoptive fatherhood.  He was meeting the next week with a PHD student at Vanderbilt, who is doing his doctoral dissertation on Gay and his ministry. If you don’t know Gay’s long and fine ministry, look him up online!

            We closed out our DC trip with a visit to Frederick Douglass’ home in Anacostia.  It evoked many feelings, as we re-visited the history of the most famous African-American of the 19th century.  He bought this house on Cedar Hill in 1877, a momentous year in American history, when Congress voted for Rutherford B. Hayes as president in exchange for his pulling the last Federal troops out of the South.  Douglass bought this home in an all white neighborhood, and I’m wondering what he thought as he moved in such a difficult year.  We give thanks for his witness!

            On the way home we spent the night in Mt. Airy, North Carolina, and took time to visit the Andy Griffith Museum.  It was at the other end of the spectrum – whiteness all over the place, and I remember being such a big fan of his show and of Mayberry when I was in junior and senior high school.  Even though I cringe at them now, some of his scenes with Don Knotts as Barney Fife still make me laugh!

            One caveat to all this whiteness in Mt. Airy – attached to the museum was a smaller museum honoring Eng and Chang Bunker, the first “official” Siamese twins.  Born in Siam (now Thailand), their parents sold them to an American sea captain in the 1800’s, and they became a media hit of their day.  They eventually settled in Mt. Airy, married sisters and had 22 children between them!

            In all of this, we missed the visit of Hurricane Irma to the Atlanta area, and our home escaped damage too – thank you!  Let us all remember and pray for the people of Puerto Rico and the Caribbean who were attacked by Irma and Maria – and let us practice what we pray!

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